Map, Los Cerrillos Mine, Santa Fe County, New Mexico, black and white, surveyed by J. L. Hayward, U.S.M.D.S., while at Turquoise City, approximate course of mineral veins, sites, names, claims, coal mining lands, August 1880
File — Oversize-Folder: 1
Scope and Content
From the Collection:
This collection was compiled by Homer Milford and donated to the Center for Southwest Research by Paul R. Secord, of Albuquerque. The Galisteo and Cerrillos mining areas are rich in minerals, including silver, copper, mangansese, iron, galena and gold, as well as turqouise. The following discussion of the Cerrillos mining is abstracted from a manuscript, contained in its entirety in this archive, prepared by Bill Baxter about 2014. “In early 1879, when the miners began arriving in the Cerrillos Hills in large numbers, they saw one of their first tasks was to set up a mining district and decide, by vote, upon the rules of their district. The men were all there for the same reason; to strike it rich. And they all knew that riches bring out the worst in people. They knew it was essential for their coming prosperity that there be mutually agreed-upon rules and regulations. The Galisteo Mining District (GMD) and the Cerrillos Mining District (CMD) were created in March of 1879…” At another meeting on January 24, 1881 the merger of the CMD and GMD was formalized, by name, and it was stipulated that the rules of the CMD take precedence.
The Homer E. Milford collection contains the records of the Galisteo and Cerrillos mining districts claims. Paul R. Secord scanned all the materials and they are on a DVD in Folder 14. There are seven books containing mining records for Cerrillos dating from April 11, 1879 to July 9, 1889. In addition, there is a single book that contains the records of the short lived Galisteo district. The seventh Cerrillos book also includes two pages of tallies documenting the (lack of) business at the Turquesa (Carbonateville) post office in 1899, the year it was finally shut down.
J. A. Larock was the Cerrillos recorder from September 1883 through July 1884, and he was succeeded by Henry Beckwith, among the longest serving and least busy of all the Cerrillos recorders, whose last entry was dated March 24, 1888. It is likely that Beckwith handed over the books and the job of recorder to Willie S. or Abraham F. Spiegelberg in either 1888 or 1889.
The subsequent chain of possession of the Cerrillos record books is uncertain, but it is likely that one of the Spiegelbergs gave them to Michael O’Neil, who probably passed them on his death to his stepson Verne Byrne. Byrne was about 22 years old when O’Neil died in 1930. Verne’s wife Laverne, some years before her passing, sold the books to the current holder Milford. Of the one hundred or more formal mining districts in New Mexico in the nineteenth century, the record books in this Cerrillos archive appear to be the only such documents to have survived.
Supplementing the mining records are a series of stereopticon slide photographs of mining in the Cerrillos by Santa Fe photographers William Henry Brown and George C. Bennett. Included is a short history of the two photographers, as well as an inventory of their work in New Mexico and Arizona, that was emailed to Milford in 2001 by Jeremy Rowe Vintage Photography. There is also photograph of the New York and New Mexico Mining Company Smelter in Cerrillos, ca. 1880, by Ben Wittick, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
The Homer E. Milford collection contains the records of the Galisteo and Cerrillos mining districts claims. Paul R. Secord scanned all the materials and they are on a DVD in Folder 14. There are seven books containing mining records for Cerrillos dating from April 11, 1879 to July 9, 1889. In addition, there is a single book that contains the records of the short lived Galisteo district. The seventh Cerrillos book also includes two pages of tallies documenting the (lack of) business at the Turquesa (Carbonateville) post office in 1899, the year it was finally shut down.
J. A. Larock was the Cerrillos recorder from September 1883 through July 1884, and he was succeeded by Henry Beckwith, among the longest serving and least busy of all the Cerrillos recorders, whose last entry was dated March 24, 1888. It is likely that Beckwith handed over the books and the job of recorder to Willie S. or Abraham F. Spiegelberg in either 1888 or 1889.
The subsequent chain of possession of the Cerrillos record books is uncertain, but it is likely that one of the Spiegelbergs gave them to Michael O’Neil, who probably passed them on his death to his stepson Verne Byrne. Byrne was about 22 years old when O’Neil died in 1930. Verne’s wife Laverne, some years before her passing, sold the books to the current holder Milford. Of the one hundred or more formal mining districts in New Mexico in the nineteenth century, the record books in this Cerrillos archive appear to be the only such documents to have survived.
Supplementing the mining records are a series of stereopticon slide photographs of mining in the Cerrillos by Santa Fe photographers William Henry Brown and George C. Bennett. Included is a short history of the two photographers, as well as an inventory of their work in New Mexico and Arizona, that was emailed to Milford in 2001 by Jeremy Rowe Vintage Photography. There is also photograph of the New York and New Mexico Mining Company Smelter in Cerrillos, ca. 1880, by Ben Wittick, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Dates
- August 1880
Language of Materials
From the Collection:
English
Access Restrictions
The collection is open for research.
Extent
From the Collection: 1 box (1 cu. ft.), plus one oversize folder
Repository Details
Part of the UNM Center for Southwest Research & Special Collections Repository
Contact:
University of New Mexico Center for Southwest Research & Special Collections
University Libraries, MSC05 3020
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque NM 87131
505-277-6451
University of New Mexico Center for Southwest Research & Special Collections
University Libraries, MSC05 3020
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque NM 87131
505-277-6451